Showing posts with label storms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label storms. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 25, 2017

A Sort of Summer Storm



It was a dark and not-yet-stormy night, but the radar map and the Weather Channel both agreed—the storm was coming. I could see it flickering at the southeastern horizon, cloud to cloud lightning, a mild incandescent light show.

I knew I needed to put the chickens up before it hit. They’d already gone to roost, but I still had to latch the doors and close the nest boxes behind them, and I didn’t want to do it in the rain. I opened the back door, urged the dog to get his business done too, but he didn’t want to go out. This was not unusual—our dog hates nature in all its forms—so I shoved him out bodily and left the door open for him to come back inside.

And the door slammed itself shut behind him.

I hadn’t touched it. The wind must be getting up, I thought, and opened it again. There was no wind, however. The trees were still and silent, not even a rustle of breeze. I stepped onto the deck just as the dog shot back into the house.

The door slammed shut behind him, yet again.

I headed for the chicken house in my bare feet. I started off walking, but then I realized how deep the silence was, as if the air had thickened. As if there were no animals, no night birds, no insects. Just this dull cottony silence broken only by the sound of my footsteps.

I started running. My imagination shifted into overdrive, and I had the sensation that I was about to be sucked into the air, like Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz. So I ran faster. I hastily locked up the chickens—silent too, hunched inside their roost—then galloped back inside and shut the door behind me, breathing hard.

And then the wind rippled to life, and the first rain pattered down, and the heavy air dissipated.

My family has a complicated relationship with wild weather. We thrill to thunder and lightning, crowding onto our porches to watch storms coming, retreating inside only when the rain becomes horizontal and the sizzling bolts too close for comfort. My mother, however, has lost two homes to tornadoes, and she tells me that the feeling I had was probably one passing overhead. Or if not a tornado exactly, a pressure system of some sort, the eye of a meteorological black hole, dense and sucking and dangerous.

She is probably right. It is a reasonable explanation. But I am Southern born and bred, with ancestors hailing from the coasts of England and Ireland. We know that some nights are darker than others, that some winds don’t come from the compass directions. We remember the old tales of the Wild Hunt, and the Fey, and the Banshee. We understand that sometimes it is best not to think too hard about doors that slam themselves shut.

It is a bright morning as I write this. The breeze is still cool-ish, not yet warmed by the baking sun. The birds fight the squirrels over the sunflower seeds I have put out, and the chickens make crooning noises as they scratch and peck.

But there’s another summer storm coming tonight. And I plan on being safely inside when it does. With a candle lit against the darkness. Just in case.

*     *     *
Tina Whittle writes the Tai Randolph mysteries for Poisoned Pen Press. The fifth book in this Atlanta-based series—Reckoning and Ruin—was released last year. Tina is a proud member of Sisters in Crime and serves as both a chapter officer and national board member. Visit her website to follow her on social media, sign up for her newsletter, or read additional scenes and short stories: www.tinawhittle.com.


Thursday, April 6, 2017

The Month of April

My daughter Mary who is now fifty years old.

April is . . .
               April is ephemeral spring beauties peeking
                           through worn out leaves.
               It’s backyard birds competing
                           in a choral contest
               And rain and squishy mud underfoot

               April is daffodils and narcissus competing
                           to produce the first bloom.
               It’s red-winged blackbirds swaying
                           on cattails by the pond
               And proliferating potholes.

               April is a school playground of discarded jackets
                           like a disordered rummage sale.
               It’s running sap, running ponies,
                           running noses
               And the return of phoebes and spring peepers.

               April is bright crocuses dancing
                           through the gardens.
               It’s that late order for seeds sent
                           to Pinetree Gardens
               And rubber boots as a fashion statement.

               April is Canada geese abandoning V formations
                           to fly in couples.
               It’s multiple motorcycles roaring                                                                                                                    down the road            
               And digging out rakes, pruners, and garden gloves.

               April is raccoons, possums, and skunks
                           littering the highways.
               It’s new green and the yellow of forsythia
                           April is warm air, new hope, cheerful smiles
               And snow covering daffodils.

A pussy willow tree by my barn.


April is all of those things in my poem and Easter, too, as well as April Fools’ Day something kids love and third grade teachers. After the crazy March we had around here, I only hope there are very few April showers. We had enough of those in March to keep the ground saturated for months. So I’m looking for a sunnier and warmer April than we had in March although there were strange days in March that even got up to seventy degrees and a few days later went down to below twenty degrees.

I was told it will be a collection piece.


In March four people I knew died, and I went to three funerals in three weeks, two in one week.
In March I finally got a cover for my 8th book after waiting over a month for it. Unfortunately, my step-granddaughter misspelled the name Phyllis on the cover, and I didn’t notice it until I ordered 25 copies of the book. I’m hoping she’ll soon correct that so I can change it.

In April I hope to finish book nine that I started while waiting for the cover of book eight.








In April I’m looking forward to Easter at my sister’s house where my only contribution will be pickles and olives.  Elaine loves to cook and is very good at it. I only cook when absolutely necessary anymore, and that’s usually something I can eat for three or four days. I figure after all the years of cooking for others it’s okay to cut back on that. I will be taking potted flowers for everyone.



This is just a very small amount of my branches.

In April I will be busy cleaning up the huge amount of branches small, big and huge from the area all around my house. They came down from the very strong winds that hit our area numerous times in March. I also need to start cleaning up my many gardens around the house.

In April I’ll be going one Sunday to St. William’s card party. There will be enough prizes for everyone attending and lots of good food to eat. I’ll be having fun playing cards with a friend, cousin, and sister-in-law. I miss playing cards since half of the friends I played cards with have died.
The Happy Days Lodge was built years ago.

In April I’ll be going to a folk concert at Happy Days Lodge in Cuyahoga Valley National Park with my good friend and fellow folk music lover, Dianne.

In April I have at least one birthday party I’ll be attending. It’s for my one year old great-grandson Santino. I may hear of more, but that’s all for now.





My pony Pufffy grazing by my blueberry bushes in bloom.

In April some of the flowering trees and bushes will start blooming.

In April I’m hoping I can get many more walks in my woods than I was able to get for the past few months because of the weather.
But what I’m looking forward to most is the end of April when I’ll be attending my tenth Malice Domestic Conference for the tenth year.  I’ll again be a moderator for Murder Small Town, and I’m already reading the books of my panelists and enjoying them.



What do you like about April?